The Macintosh Quadra 700 is a personal computer designed, manufactured
and sold by Apple Computer, Inc. from October 1991 to March 1993. It
was introduced alongside the Quadra 900 as the first computers in the
Quadra series using Motorola 68040 processor.[2] It is also the first
computer from Apple to be housed in a mini-tower form factor, which in
1991 was becoming a popular alternative to standard desktop-on-monitor
cases that were common through the 1980s.
The Quadra 700 originally had a list price of $5,700 USD, but had
dropped to under $4,700 for a base model by the time its replacement,
the Macintosh Quadra 800, went on sale in early 1993.[2] The Centris
650, also introduced around the same time, offered incrementally more
performance than the Quadra 700 in a desktop-style case at a price
point closer to $3,000.[3]

Hardware[edit]
Form factor: The Quadra 700 case is largely the same as the popular
Macintosh IIcx and Macintosh IIci models; this made it possible for
users of those models to upgrade to the more powerful Quadra 700.
Users sometimes placed the older case vertically in a mini-tower
orientation and the Quadra 700 recognized this by having the Apple
logo and model name printed in the vertical orientation. The IIcx and
IIci were designed to allow their rubber feet to be moved to the side
for vertical orientation as well.
CPU: Motorola 68040 @ 25 MHz. The clock oscillator runs at 50 MHz;
replacing it with a faster oscillator (up to 74 MHz) results in a
performance increase.[4]
Memory: The Quadra 700 could be upgraded to 68 megabytes of RAM, which
with its 25 MHz processor made it a very useful computer for
scientific or design work.
Expansion: Two Nubus slots and a PDS slot; processor upgrades from
Apple and other manufacturers were sold for the 700 when the PowerPC
601 accelerator cards came along in 1994.
Storage: 80 and 160 MB hard disks were available at launch. A faster
230 MB unit became available in mid-1993 when the Quadra 950 was
introduced.[5]
Video: Like the IIci, the 700 has integrated graphics built into the
system board but, unlike the earlier model, it uses dedicated VRAM for
its video memory.[6] The onboard video came with 512 kilobytes VRAM
soldered to the motherboard, and supported resolutions up to 1152x870.
The video memory was expandable to 2 megabytes via 6 256-kilobyte 100
nS VRAM SIMMs in each of VRAM SIMM expansion slots on the motherboard.
Expanding the video memory to 2 megabytes allowed for 24-bit
(Millions) color at resolutions up to 832x624.
Sound: The sound was 8-bit stereo.
Ports: I/O was available with dual serial ports, an AAUI ethernet
port, mic in, and a DB-25 SCSI connector. The Quadra 700, along with
the 900, are the first Macintosh models with built-in support for
Ethernet networking.[1]
Operating system: System 7.0.1 was included as standard. This is the
earliest Macintosh model to support Mac OS 8.
In popular culture[edit]

This Macintosh, along with some others, was one of the computers
featured in the film Jurassic Park (1993).

Timeline of Macintosh Quadra and Centris models
See also: Timeline of Macintosh models